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(18 Oct2015) The normally crowded, busy streets of the Old City in Jerusalem appeared quieter on Sunday following days of increased tension and violence between Israelis and Palestinians across the region.
Israeli troops patrolled the streets, searching Palestinian youths and checking their identity cards meticulously after a wave of stabbings and shootings that have gripped the Palestinian occupied territories.
Shop keepers in the Old City complained bitterly of not earning enough, blaming their lack of custom on harassment by Israeli soldiers.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/445f8bf69f1b314c9ed07ff252a1f4da
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Over the past year, the price of a Bitcoin has skyrocketed from less than $800 to nearly $20,000 — a meteoric rise that financial insiders say is no different than the escalating cost of a tulip in seventeenth-century Amsterdam.
Is it a bubble? Who cares! As VICENews' Jay Kang told us, “It’s impossible right now to not get rich if you own any Bitcoin.”
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com
Follow VICE News here:
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published:12 Dec 2017

views:994453

English/Nat
60 pilgrims from all faiths, nationalities and walks of life marched through the streets of Jerusalem today as part of a 9 month, 20 country pilgrimage for peace.
The colourful group, led by Buddhist monks from Japan began their journey in Auschwitz, Poland back in December 1994.
The journey will end in Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th1995, the anniversary of the ending of World War Two.
The group started its pilgrimage at the Nazi death in Auschwitz in December 1994. They've crossed through many European countries including the war torn Bosnia and Serbia and will finally arrive in Hiroshima, Japan for the August 6th anniversary of the ending of World War 11.
The pilgrims have now arrived in Israel and will continue their journey via the West Bank, Jordan, and Iraq before crossing into Asia, where they will visit Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia and Vietnam.
The group has members from all religions and will visit churches, mosques, and synagogues. Many are currently observing the month-long fast for the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.
SOUNDBITE:
This year is 50 years since World War Two and we wanted to deeply reflect our history with the human beings created in order to create peace through the next age and generation. That's why we are walking as an interfaith march of peace and pilgrimage.
SUPERCAPTION: Kioshi Sasamari , Japanese BuddhistMonk
Their pilgrimage covers 10,000 kms and members of the group range in age from 17 to 74.
SOUNDBITE:
We are walking through 20 countries over 9 months in the worst of weather in almost every country and I feel a very deep need to go to pray for peace and victims of these wars. To learn more about what has happened to these people and hopefully through our presence spark a little more spirituality and to recognize the sacredness of our lives.
SUPER CAPTION: Joe Roach, Pilgrim from Massachusetts, U-S-A
They hope their march of peace will encourage all nationalities and religions to work for a peaceful end to all conflicts.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/c1b86c4a2ffe3328df6b3fcf001ad528
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

published:21 Jul 2015

views:64

watch part 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jrr3eNbn_HE

published:18 May 2015

views:596620

(12 Jun 2016) LEAD IN:
The bustling markets of East Jerusalem really come alive during the holy month of Ramadan.
After a day's fasting, there's plenty here to satisfy thousands of hungry Muslims.
STORY-LINE:
A worker lights the fuse and retreats to a safe distance.
This is the moment Muslims await.
The boom of the Ramadan canon. A single shot is fired marking sunset.
It is time for 'iftar' or the breaking of the fast after a long day of not eating or drinking.
Appetite soars in Ramadan. Food is on display in the busy markets of East Jerusalem. Katayef, being the most popular Ramadan dessert, is prepared right in front of passers-by.
For someone who is fasting, the sight and the smell are irresistible.
"During the month of Ramadan people desire sweets the most, katayef the most, then we have namorra. Demand for knafe drops of course" says Amjad Abu Sbeih, a sweet shop co-owner in the old city of Jerusalem.
Katayef is served especially in the month of Ramadan and is made in the shape of a crescent.
The round dough is stuffed with unsalted white cheese, folded in the shape of a crescent and then baked in an oven or fried in a pan. Sugar syrup is added afterwards.
'Barazea' is also on display, something of a delicacy at three times the prince of pita bread.
'Barazea' is a very thin crust bread, covered with sesame seeds. It is also served in Ramadan as a snack in the late hours of the evening, after iftar.
Hummus and falafel are popular all year round with Palestinians but it is in Ramadan when they are most in demand.
But for some traders, business could be better. The threat of falling numbers due to travel restrictions in the area is having an impact.
"We hope on Friday Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza are allowed into Jerusalem so that there will be more economic activity because in reality the situation is very bad. This volume of people that you see now began only in the last half hour. It has been slow for most of the day," says shop owner Muhamad Ekermawi.
Falafel, during the holy month, is made in different shapes and flavours. They even stuff it with french cream cheese, which many find delicious.
As night falls, colourful lights decorate the city.
Fasting time is almost 16 hours this time of the year. It starts around 4 a.m. and lasts till nearly 8 p.m.
But as the sun sets, it's time to eat.
For young Muhamad Edkeidek, tonight's iftar meal was a rich selection of food.
"I had a stuffed whole chicken and soup, salads and Katayef for dessert."
Some people take the month of Ramadan off and devote their time to worshiping; praying and reading the Quran.
While others simply work reduced hours.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d75aea0b77981949e1c1c011a942a861
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

(19 Oct 2015) Israeli security forces placed a guard post in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Jabel Mukaber in East Jerusalem on Monday, as part of the heightened security effort following a spate of attacks, mostly stabbings, by Palestinian assailants.
Israeli police have already erected a barrier between the Jewish neighbourhood of Armon Hanatziv from the adjacent Jabel Mukaber, from where a number of Palestinian attackers came.
Israel has deployed thousands of police, backed up by troops, to maintain order around the country over the past few weeks.
Those measures, however, have so far failed to stop the violence.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f16648bdd448b375501b036e7fa4557d
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

East Jerusalem

East Jerusalem or Eastern Jerusalem (Arabic:القدس الشرقية‎, Hebrew: מזרח ירושלים) is the sector of Jerusalem that was not part of Israeli-held West Jerusalem at the end of the 1948–1949 Arab–Israeli War. Israeli and Palestinian definitions of it differ; the Palestinian official position is based on the 1949–1967 post-armistice situation, while the Israeli position is mainly based on the current municipality boundaries of Jerusalem, which resulted from a series of administrative enlargements decided by Israeli municipal authorities since 1967. Despite its name, East Jerusalem includes neighborhoods to the north, east and south of the Old City, and in the wider definition of the term even on all these sides of West Jerusalem.

During the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Jerusalem was contested between Jordan and Israel, and on the cessation of hostilities, the two countries secretly negotiated a division of the city, with the eastern sector coming under Jordanian rule. This arrangement was formalized in the Rhodes Agreement in March 1949. A week after David Ben-Gurion presented his party's assertion that "Jewish Jerusalem is an organic, inseparable part of the State of Israel" in December 1949, Jordan annexed East Jerusalem. These decisions were confirmed respectively in the Knesset in January 1950 and the Jordanian Parliament in April 1950.

The West Bank, including East Jerusalem, has a land area of 5,640km2 plus a water area of 220km2, consisting of the northwest quarter of the Dead Sea. It has an estimated population of 2,676,740 (July 2013). More than 80%, about 2,800,000, are Palestinian Arabs, and approximately 500,000 are Jewish Israelis living in the West Bank, including about 192,000 in East Jerusalem, in Israeli settlements, built on the 43% of the West Bank which Israel has allocated to local settler councils. The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this. The International Court of Justice advisory ruling (2004) concluded that events that came after the 1967 occupation of the West Bank by Israel, including the Jerusalem Law, Israel's peace treaty with Jordan and the Oslo Accords, did not change the status of the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) as occupied territory with Israel as the occupying power.

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2:13

Jerusalem traders suffer amid MidEast tension

Jerusalem traders suffer amid MidEast tension

Jerusalem traders suffer amid MidEast tension

(18 Oct2015) The normally crowded, busy streets of the Old City in Jerusalem appeared quieter on Sunday following days of increased tension and violence between Israelis and Palestinians across the region.
Israeli troops patrolled the streets, searching Palestinian youths and checking their identity cards meticulously after a wave of stabbings and shootings that have gripped the Palestinian occupied territories.
Shop keepers in the Old City complained bitterly of not earning enough, blaming their lack of custom on harassment by Israeli soldiers.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/445f8bf69f1b314c9ed07ff252a1f4da
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

What It's Like To Be Absolutely Obsessed With Bitcoin (HBO)

Over the past year, the price of a Bitcoin has skyrocketed from less than $800 to nearly $20,000 — a meteoric rise that financial insiders say is no different than the escalating cost of a tulip in seventeenth-century Amsterdam.
Is it a bubble? Who cares! As VICENews' Jay Kang told us, “It’s impossible right now to not get rich if you own any Bitcoin.”
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com
Follow VICE News here:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vicenews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/vicenews
Tumblr: http://vicenews.tumblr.com/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/vicenews
More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideo

2:04

ISRAEL: PILGRIM'S MARCH REACHES JERUSALEM

ISRAEL: PILGRIM'S MARCH REACHES JERUSALEM

ISRAEL: PILGRIM'S MARCH REACHES JERUSALEM

English/Nat
60 pilgrims from all faiths, nationalities and walks of life marched through the streets of Jerusalem today as part of a 9 month, 20 country pilgrimage for peace.
The colourful group, led by Buddhist monks from Japan began their journey in Auschwitz, Poland back in December 1994.
The journey will end in Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th1995, the anniversary of the ending of World War Two.
The group started its pilgrimage at the Nazi death in Auschwitz in December 1994. They've crossed through many European countries including the war torn Bosnia and Serbia and will finally arrive in Hiroshima, Japan for the August 6th anniversary of the ending of World War 11.
The pilgrims have now arrived in Israel and will continue their journey via the West Bank, Jordan, and Iraq before crossing into Asia, where they will visit Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia and Vietnam.
The group has members from all religions and will visit churches, mosques, and synagogues. Many are currently observing the month-long fast for the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.
SOUNDBITE:
This year is 50 years since World War Two and we wanted to deeply reflect our history with the human beings created in order to create peace through the next age and generation. That's why we are walking as an interfaith march of peace and pilgrimage.
SUPERCAPTION: Kioshi Sasamari , Japanese BuddhistMonk
Their pilgrimage covers 10,000 kms and members of the group range in age from 17 to 74.
SOUNDBITE:
We are walking through 20 countries over 9 months in the worst of weather in almost every country and I feel a very deep need to go to pray for peace and victims of these wars. To learn more about what has happened to these people and hopefully through our presence spark a little more spirituality and to recognize the sacredness of our lives.
SUPER CAPTION: Joe Roach, Pilgrim from Massachusetts, U-S-A
They hope their march of peace will encourage all nationalities and religions to work for a peaceful end to all conflicts.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/c1b86c4a2ffe3328df6b3fcf001ad528
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

2:45

Pepe market crash ruins lives in Israel

Pepe market crash ruins lives in Israel

Pepe market crash ruins lives in Israel

watch part 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jrr3eNbn_HE

3:32

Dishes of all kinds break the fast in East Jerusalem

Dishes of all kinds break the fast in East Jerusalem

Dishes of all kinds break the fast in East Jerusalem

(12 Jun 2016) LEAD IN:
The bustling markets of East Jerusalem really come alive during the holy month of Ramadan.
After a day's fasting, there's plenty here to satisfy thousands of hungry Muslims.
STORY-LINE:
A worker lights the fuse and retreats to a safe distance.
This is the moment Muslims await.
The boom of the Ramadan canon. A single shot is fired marking sunset.
It is time for 'iftar' or the breaking of the fast after a long day of not eating or drinking.
Appetite soars in Ramadan. Food is on display in the busy markets of East Jerusalem. Katayef, being the most popular Ramadan dessert, is prepared right in front of passers-by.
For someone who is fasting, the sight and the smell are irresistible.
"During the month of Ramadan people desire sweets the most, katayef the most, then we have namorra. Demand for knafe drops of course" says Amjad Abu Sbeih, a sweet shop co-owner in the old city of Jerusalem.
Katayef is served especially in the month of Ramadan and is made in the shape of a crescent.
The round dough is stuffed with unsalted white cheese, folded in the shape of a crescent and then baked in an oven or fried in a pan. Sugar syrup is added afterwards.
'Barazea' is also on display, something of a delicacy at three times the prince of pita bread.
'Barazea' is a very thin crust bread, covered with sesame seeds. It is also served in Ramadan as a snack in the late hours of the evening, after iftar.
Hummus and falafel are popular all year round with Palestinians but it is in Ramadan when they are most in demand.
But for some traders, business could be better. The threat of falling numbers due to travel restrictions in the area is having an impact.
"We hope on Friday Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza are allowed into Jerusalem so that there will be more economic activity because in reality the situation is very bad. This volume of people that you see now began only in the last half hour. It has been slow for most of the day," says shop owner Muhamad Ekermawi.
Falafel, during the holy month, is made in different shapes and flavours. They even stuff it with french cream cheese, which many find delicious.
As night falls, colourful lights decorate the city.
Fasting time is almost 16 hours this time of the year. It starts around 4 a.m. and lasts till nearly 8 p.m.
But as the sun sets, it's time to eat.
For young Muhamad Edkeidek, tonight's iftar meal was a rich selection of food.
"I had a stuffed whole chicken and soup, salads and Katayef for dessert."
Some people take the month of Ramadan off and devote their time to worshiping; praying and reading the Quran.
While others simply work reduced hours.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d75aea0b77981949e1c1c011a942a861
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Guard posts to monitor Jerusalem boundries

(19 Oct 2015) Israeli security forces placed a guard post in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Jabel Mukaber in East Jerusalem on Monday, as part of the heightened security effort following a spate of attacks, mostly stabbings, by Palestinian assailants.
Israeli police have already erected a barrier between the Jewish neighbourhood of Armon Hanatziv from the adjacent Jabel Mukaber, from where a number of Palestinian attackers came.
Israel has deployed thousands of police, backed up by troops, to maintain order around the country over the past few weeks.
Those measures, however, have so far failed to stop the violence.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f16648bdd448b375501b036e7fa4557d
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Jewish Meditation Institute of Jerusalem

Preparations for Eid in Gaza, East Jerusalem and Ramallah

SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION
Gaza City, Gaza Strip
1. Various of sweet stand at market
2. Close up of sweets
3. Man shopping for sweets
4. Woman at market
5. Close up of bag with sweets
6. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Abdul Nasser Nashwan, Gaza resident:
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult."
7. Close up of snacks
8. Mid of nuts stand
9. People working in market
Jerusalem
10. Wide of Al-Aqsa mosque
11. Mid of entrance to mosque
12. Close up of Muslim worshipper reading Quran inside mosque
13. Mid of street vendor in east Jerusalem alley
14. Shop owner standing in traditional pastry shop
15. Close up of pastries
16. Mid of sweets stand
Ramallah, West Bank
17. Mid of toy vendor
18. Children looking at dolls
19. Close up of girl choosing doll
20. Family walking in market
21. Women buying peaches
22. Man buying socks
23. Close up of baby
24. People choosing shirts
25. Girl walking with balloon
26. Mid of fruit stand
27. Women looking at shoes at market
28. Queue at shop selling nuts
29. Close up of girl inside shop
30. Wide of square in Ramallah
STORYLINE
Market traders across Jerusalem, the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip stocked up on sweets as people prepared for Eid al-Fitr, the Muslim holiday marking the end of Ramadan.
The celebrations last for three days and are a time for family gatherings and exchanging gifts.
The holiday atmosphere however, was muted in Gaza Strip, after the overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt led the new regime to close the Gaza-Egypt border, driving up prices.
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult" said Gaza resident Abdul Nasser Nashwan.
Thousands of workers in already blighted Gaza have been laid off because Egypt has closed the border, while some of the tens of thousands of Palestinians studying and working in Egypt are keeping a low profile for fear being targeted in an anti-Hamas backlash.
Egypt's new rulers have portrayed Hamas and Mohammed Morsi as co-conspirators in a plot to destabilise Egypt and harm the country's interests.
Elsewhere in Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah, there was a more festive atmosphere.
Outdoor markets were filled with Palestinian shoppers stocking up on sweets, presents and new clothes ahead of the festival.
The Eid holiday begins on the first day of the month of Shawal, the tenth month of the lunar Islamic calendar.
There are however, regional differences in the exact timing of Eid due to different interpretations of the lunar calendar.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d844afbae3f56efd41971d21dd941806
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Breaking 20-20: US to open embassy in Jerusalem in 2019

America will shift its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem by the end of 2019, US Vice PresidentMike Pence told Israeli parliamentarians to enthusiastic applause.
About Channel:
Zee News is a Hindi news channel with 24 hour coverage. Zee News covers breaking news, latest news, politics, entertainment and sports from India & World.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe to our other network channels:
Zee Business: https://goo.gl/fulFdi
Dr. Subhash ChandraShow: https://goo.gl/fCugXC
Daily News and Analysis: https://goo.gl/B8eVsD
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You can also visit us at:
http://zeenews.india.com/
Like us on Facebook:
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Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/ZeeNews
Follow us on G+:
https://plus.google.com/+Zeenews

2:38

STRANGERSTAN: Machane Yehuda Market of Jerusalem

STRANGERSTAN: Machane Yehuda Market of Jerusalem

STRANGERSTAN: Machane Yehuda Market of Jerusalem

Episode one of the Strangerstan blog by Serge Kharytonau. A quick insight into daily life of Machane YehudaMarket in Jerusalem, Israel. The market is commonly known as the Shuk, and is the largest marketplace in Jerusalem, Israel.
More than 250 vendors sell fresh goods here: fruits, vegetables, bakery, beers, wines, liquors, falafel, shawarma, kibbeh, kebab, shashlik, kanafeh, baklava, fish, meat, cheeses, nuts, seeds, spices, halva, zalabiya, apparel, shoes, housewares, textiles, and whatever else!
The music is generously provided by Yossi 'Yuc Beats' Steinman (Los Angeles, the United States). Go check out their profile for more groovy sounds: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3Bd6MLIjhbnJJ1kdmbJWDA

Zoltan Kodaly - Jesus and the traders (Debrecen Chorus)

Zoltan Kodaly (1882 - 1967):
JESUS AND THE TRADERS
(Jézus és a kufárok)
Zoltán Kodály was a Hungarian composer, ethnomusicologist, pedagogue, linguist, and philosopher. He is best known internationally as the creator of the Kodály Method.
Kodály wrote this choral piece for 4-part choir in 1934. The text is based on bible verses: The story about Jesus arriving in Jerusalem, where he drives the traders out of the temple. In Mark (chapter 11, 15-18) the incident is described as follows:
And they come to Jerusalem: and Jesus went into the temple, and began to cast out them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves;
And would not suffer that any man should carry any vessel through the temple.
And he taught, saying unto them, Is it not written, My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer? but ye have made it a den of thieves.
And the scribes and chief priests heard it, and sought how they might destroy him: for they feared him, because all the people was astonished at his doctrine.
DebrecenKodalyChorus
Conducted by Péter Erdei

Jerusalem traders suffer amid MidEast tension

(18 Oct2015) The normally crowded, busy streets of the Old City in Jerusalem appeared quieter on Sunday following days of increased tension and violence between Israelis and Palestinians across the region.
Israeli troops patrolled the streets, searching Palestinian youths and checking their identity cards meticulously after a wave of stabbings and shootings that have gripped the Palestinian occupied territories.
Shop keepers in the Old City complained bitterly of not earning enough, blaming their lack of custom on harassment by Israeli soldiers.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/445f8bf69f1b314c9ed07ff252a1f4da
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

What It's Like To Be Absolutely Obsessed With Bitcoin (HBO)

Over the past year, the price of a Bitcoin has skyrocketed from less than $800 to nearly $20,000 — a meteoric rise that financial insiders say is no different than the escalating cost of a tulip in seventeenth-century Amsterdam.
Is it a bubble? Who cares! As VICENews' Jay Kang told us, “It’s impossible right now to not get rich if you own any Bitcoin.”
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com
Follow VICE News here:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vicenews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/vicenews
Tumblr: http://vicenews.tumblr.com/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/vicenews
More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideo

Pepe market crash ruins lives in Israel

watch part 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jrr3eNbn_HE

published: 18 May 2015

Dishes of all kinds break the fast in East Jerusalem

(12 Jun 2016) LEAD IN:
The bustling markets of East Jerusalem really come alive during the holy month of Ramadan.
After a day's fasting, there's plenty here to satisfy thousands of hungry Muslims.
STORY-LINE:
A worker lights the fuse and retreats to a safe distance.
This is the moment Muslims await.
The boom of the Ramadan canon. A single shot is fired marking sunset.
It is time for 'iftar' or the breaking of the fast after a long day of not eating or drinking.
Appetite soars in Ramadan. Food is on display in the busy markets of East Jerusalem. Katayef, being the most popular Ramadan dessert, is prepared right in front of passers-by.
For someone who is fasting, the sight and the smell are irresistible.
"During the month of Ramadan people desire sweets the most, katayef th...

Jerusalem: City of David

Guard posts to monitor Jerusalem boundries

(19 Oct 2015) Israeli security forces placed a guard post in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Jabel Mukaber in East Jerusalem on Monday, as part of the heightened security effort following a spate of attacks, mostly stabbings, by Palestinian assailants.
Israeli police have already erected a barrier between the Jewish neighbourhood of Armon Hanatziv from the adjacent Jabel Mukaber, from where a number of Palestinian attackers came.
Israel has deployed thousands of police, backed up by troops, to maintain order around the country over the past few weeks.
Those measures, however, have so far failed to stop the violence.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f16648bdd448b375501b036e7fa4557d
Find out more about AP Archive: http://ww...

published: 17 Nov 2016

Jewish Meditation Institute of Jerusalem

Preparations for Eid in Gaza, East Jerusalem and Ramallah

SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION
Gaza City, Gaza Strip
1. Various of sweet stand at market
2. Close up of sweets
3. Man shopping for sweets
4. Woman at market
5. Close up of bag with sweets
6. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Abdul Nasser Nashwan, Gaza resident:
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult."
7. Close up of snacks
8. Mid of nuts stand
9. People working in market
Jerusalem
10. Wide of Al-Aqsa mosque
11. Mid of entrance to mosque
12. Close up of Muslim worshipper reading Quran inside mosque
13. Mid of street vendor in east Jerusalem alley
14. Shop owner standing in traditional pastry shop
15. ...

Breaking 20-20: US to open embassy in Jerusalem in 2019

America will shift its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem by the end of 2019, US Vice PresidentMike Pence told Israeli parliamentarians to enthusiastic applause.
About Channel:
Zee News is a Hindi news channel with 24 hour coverage. Zee News covers breaking news, latest news, politics, entertainment and sports from India & World.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe to our other network channels:
Zee Business: https://goo.gl/fulFdi
Dr. Subhash ChandraShow: https://goo.gl/fCugXC
Daily News and Analysis: https://goo.gl/B8eVsD
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You can also visit us at:
http://zeenews.india.com/
Like us on Facebook:...

published: 23 Jan 2018

STRANGERSTAN: Machane Yehuda Market of Jerusalem

Episode one of the Strangerstan blog by Serge Kharytonau. A quick insight into daily life of Machane YehudaMarket in Jerusalem, Israel. The market is commonly known as the Shuk, and is the largest marketplace in Jerusalem, Israel.
More than 250 vendors sell fresh goods here: fruits, vegetables, bakery, beers, wines, liquors, falafel, shawarma, kibbeh, kebab, shashlik, kanafeh, baklava, fish, meat, cheeses, nuts, seeds, spices, halva, zalabiya, apparel, shoes, housewares, textiles, and whatever else!
The music is generously provided by Yossi 'Yuc Beats' Steinman (Los Angeles, the United States). Go check out their profile for more groovy sounds: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3Bd6MLIjhbnJJ1kdmbJWDA

Zoltan Kodaly - Jesus and the traders (Debrecen Chorus)

Zoltan Kodaly (1882 - 1967):
JESUS AND THE TRADERS
(Jézus és a kufárok)
Zoltán Kodály was a Hungarian composer, ethnomusicologist, pedagogue, linguist, and philosopher. He is best known internationally as the creator of the Kodály Method.
Kodály wrote this choral piece for 4-part choir in 1934. The text is based on bible verses: The story about Jesus arriving in Jerusalem, where he drives the traders out of the temple. In Mark (chapter 11, 15-18) the incident is described as follows:
And they come to Jerusalem: and Jesus went into the temple, and began to cast out them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves;
And would not suffer that any man should carry any vessel through the temple.
And he ...

Jerusalem traders suffer amid MidEast tension

(18 Oct2015) The normally crowded, busy streets of the Old City in Jerusalem appeared quieter on Sunday following days of increased tension and violence betwee...

(18 Oct2015) The normally crowded, busy streets of the Old City in Jerusalem appeared quieter on Sunday following days of increased tension and violence between Israelis and Palestinians across the region.
Israeli troops patrolled the streets, searching Palestinian youths and checking their identity cards meticulously after a wave of stabbings and shootings that have gripped the Palestinian occupied territories.
Shop keepers in the Old City complained bitterly of not earning enough, blaming their lack of custom on harassment by Israeli soldiers.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/445f8bf69f1b314c9ed07ff252a1f4da
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

(18 Oct2015) The normally crowded, busy streets of the Old City in Jerusalem appeared quieter on Sunday following days of increased tension and violence between Israelis and Palestinians across the region.
Israeli troops patrolled the streets, searching Palestinian youths and checking their identity cards meticulously after a wave of stabbings and shootings that have gripped the Palestinian occupied territories.
Shop keepers in the Old City complained bitterly of not earning enough, blaming their lack of custom on harassment by Israeli soldiers.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/445f8bf69f1b314c9ed07ff252a1f4da
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

What It's Like To Be Absolutely Obsessed With Bitcoin (HBO)

Over the past year, the price of a Bitcoin has skyrocketed from less than $800 to nearly $20,000 — a meteoric rise that financial insiders say is no different t...

Over the past year, the price of a Bitcoin has skyrocketed from less than $800 to nearly $20,000 — a meteoric rise that financial insiders say is no different than the escalating cost of a tulip in seventeenth-century Amsterdam.
Is it a bubble? Who cares! As VICENews' Jay Kang told us, “It’s impossible right now to not get rich if you own any Bitcoin.”
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
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Over the past year, the price of a Bitcoin has skyrocketed from less than $800 to nearly $20,000 — a meteoric rise that financial insiders say is no different than the escalating cost of a tulip in seventeenth-century Amsterdam.
Is it a bubble? Who cares! As VICENews' Jay Kang told us, “It’s impossible right now to not get rich if you own any Bitcoin.”
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com
Follow VICE News here:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vicenews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/vicenews
Tumblr: http://vicenews.tumblr.com/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/vicenews
More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideo

ISRAEL: PILGRIM'S MARCH REACHES JERUSALEM

English/Nat
60 pilgrims from all faiths, nationalities and walks of life marched through the streets of Jerusalem today as part of a 9 month, 20 country pil...

English/Nat
60 pilgrims from all faiths, nationalities and walks of life marched through the streets of Jerusalem today as part of a 9 month, 20 country pilgrimage for peace.
The colourful group, led by Buddhist monks from Japan began their journey in Auschwitz, Poland back in December 1994.
The journey will end in Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th1995, the anniversary of the ending of World War Two.
The group started its pilgrimage at the Nazi death in Auschwitz in December 1994. They've crossed through many European countries including the war torn Bosnia and Serbia and will finally arrive in Hiroshima, Japan for the August 6th anniversary of the ending of World War 11.
The pilgrims have now arrived in Israel and will continue their journey via the West Bank, Jordan, and Iraq before crossing into Asia, where they will visit Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia and Vietnam.
The group has members from all religions and will visit churches, mosques, and synagogues. Many are currently observing the month-long fast for the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.
SOUNDBITE:
This year is 50 years since World War Two and we wanted to deeply reflect our history with the human beings created in order to create peace through the next age and generation. That's why we are walking as an interfaith march of peace and pilgrimage.
SUPERCAPTION: Kioshi Sasamari , Japanese BuddhistMonk
Their pilgrimage covers 10,000 kms and members of the group range in age from 17 to 74.
SOUNDBITE:
We are walking through 20 countries over 9 months in the worst of weather in almost every country and I feel a very deep need to go to pray for peace and victims of these wars. To learn more about what has happened to these people and hopefully through our presence spark a little more spirituality and to recognize the sacredness of our lives.
SUPER CAPTION: Joe Roach, Pilgrim from Massachusetts, U-S-A
They hope their march of peace will encourage all nationalities and religions to work for a peaceful end to all conflicts.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/c1b86c4a2ffe3328df6b3fcf001ad528
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

English/Nat
60 pilgrims from all faiths, nationalities and walks of life marched through the streets of Jerusalem today as part of a 9 month, 20 country pilgrimage for peace.
The colourful group, led by Buddhist monks from Japan began their journey in Auschwitz, Poland back in December 1994.
The journey will end in Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th1995, the anniversary of the ending of World War Two.
The group started its pilgrimage at the Nazi death in Auschwitz in December 1994. They've crossed through many European countries including the war torn Bosnia and Serbia and will finally arrive in Hiroshima, Japan for the August 6th anniversary of the ending of World War 11.
The pilgrims have now arrived in Israel and will continue their journey via the West Bank, Jordan, and Iraq before crossing into Asia, where they will visit Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia and Vietnam.
The group has members from all religions and will visit churches, mosques, and synagogues. Many are currently observing the month-long fast for the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.
SOUNDBITE:
This year is 50 years since World War Two and we wanted to deeply reflect our history with the human beings created in order to create peace through the next age and generation. That's why we are walking as an interfaith march of peace and pilgrimage.
SUPERCAPTION: Kioshi Sasamari , Japanese BuddhistMonk
Their pilgrimage covers 10,000 kms and members of the group range in age from 17 to 74.
SOUNDBITE:
We are walking through 20 countries over 9 months in the worst of weather in almost every country and I feel a very deep need to go to pray for peace and victims of these wars. To learn more about what has happened to these people and hopefully through our presence spark a little more spirituality and to recognize the sacredness of our lives.
SUPER CAPTION: Joe Roach, Pilgrim from Massachusetts, U-S-A
They hope their march of peace will encourage all nationalities and religions to work for a peaceful end to all conflicts.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/c1b86c4a2ffe3328df6b3fcf001ad528
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Dishes of all kinds break the fast in East Jerusalem

(12 Jun 2016) LEAD IN:
The bustling markets of East Jerusalem really come alive during the holy month of Ramadan.
After a day's fasting, there's plenty here t...

(12 Jun 2016) LEAD IN:
The bustling markets of East Jerusalem really come alive during the holy month of Ramadan.
After a day's fasting, there's plenty here to satisfy thousands of hungry Muslims.
STORY-LINE:
A worker lights the fuse and retreats to a safe distance.
This is the moment Muslims await.
The boom of the Ramadan canon. A single shot is fired marking sunset.
It is time for 'iftar' or the breaking of the fast after a long day of not eating or drinking.
Appetite soars in Ramadan. Food is on display in the busy markets of East Jerusalem. Katayef, being the most popular Ramadan dessert, is prepared right in front of passers-by.
For someone who is fasting, the sight and the smell are irresistible.
"During the month of Ramadan people desire sweets the most, katayef the most, then we have namorra. Demand for knafe drops of course" says Amjad Abu Sbeih, a sweet shop co-owner in the old city of Jerusalem.
Katayef is served especially in the month of Ramadan and is made in the shape of a crescent.
The round dough is stuffed with unsalted white cheese, folded in the shape of a crescent and then baked in an oven or fried in a pan. Sugar syrup is added afterwards.
'Barazea' is also on display, something of a delicacy at three times the prince of pita bread.
'Barazea' is a very thin crust bread, covered with sesame seeds. It is also served in Ramadan as a snack in the late hours of the evening, after iftar.
Hummus and falafel are popular all year round with Palestinians but it is in Ramadan when they are most in demand.
But for some traders, business could be better. The threat of falling numbers due to travel restrictions in the area is having an impact.
"We hope on Friday Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza are allowed into Jerusalem so that there will be more economic activity because in reality the situation is very bad. This volume of people that you see now began only in the last half hour. It has been slow for most of the day," says shop owner Muhamad Ekermawi.
Falafel, during the holy month, is made in different shapes and flavours. They even stuff it with french cream cheese, which many find delicious.
As night falls, colourful lights decorate the city.
Fasting time is almost 16 hours this time of the year. It starts around 4 a.m. and lasts till nearly 8 p.m.
But as the sun sets, it's time to eat.
For young Muhamad Edkeidek, tonight's iftar meal was a rich selection of food.
"I had a stuffed whole chicken and soup, salads and Katayef for dessert."
Some people take the month of Ramadan off and devote their time to worshiping; praying and reading the Quran.
While others simply work reduced hours.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d75aea0b77981949e1c1c011a942a861
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

(12 Jun 2016) LEAD IN:
The bustling markets of East Jerusalem really come alive during the holy month of Ramadan.
After a day's fasting, there's plenty here to satisfy thousands of hungry Muslims.
STORY-LINE:
A worker lights the fuse and retreats to a safe distance.
This is the moment Muslims await.
The boom of the Ramadan canon. A single shot is fired marking sunset.
It is time for 'iftar' or the breaking of the fast after a long day of not eating or drinking.
Appetite soars in Ramadan. Food is on display in the busy markets of East Jerusalem. Katayef, being the most popular Ramadan dessert, is prepared right in front of passers-by.
For someone who is fasting, the sight and the smell are irresistible.
"During the month of Ramadan people desire sweets the most, katayef the most, then we have namorra. Demand for knafe drops of course" says Amjad Abu Sbeih, a sweet shop co-owner in the old city of Jerusalem.
Katayef is served especially in the month of Ramadan and is made in the shape of a crescent.
The round dough is stuffed with unsalted white cheese, folded in the shape of a crescent and then baked in an oven or fried in a pan. Sugar syrup is added afterwards.
'Barazea' is also on display, something of a delicacy at three times the prince of pita bread.
'Barazea' is a very thin crust bread, covered with sesame seeds. It is also served in Ramadan as a snack in the late hours of the evening, after iftar.
Hummus and falafel are popular all year round with Palestinians but it is in Ramadan when they are most in demand.
But for some traders, business could be better. The threat of falling numbers due to travel restrictions in the area is having an impact.
"We hope on Friday Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza are allowed into Jerusalem so that there will be more economic activity because in reality the situation is very bad. This volume of people that you see now began only in the last half hour. It has been slow for most of the day," says shop owner Muhamad Ekermawi.
Falafel, during the holy month, is made in different shapes and flavours. They even stuff it with french cream cheese, which many find delicious.
As night falls, colourful lights decorate the city.
Fasting time is almost 16 hours this time of the year. It starts around 4 a.m. and lasts till nearly 8 p.m.
But as the sun sets, it's time to eat.
For young Muhamad Edkeidek, tonight's iftar meal was a rich selection of food.
"I had a stuffed whole chicken and soup, salads and Katayef for dessert."
Some people take the month of Ramadan off and devote their time to worshiping; praying and reading the Quran.
While others simply work reduced hours.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d75aea0b77981949e1c1c011a942a861
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

(19 Oct 2015) Israeli security forces placed a guard post in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Jabel Mukaber in East Jerusalem on Monday, as part of the heightened security effort following a spate of attacks, mostly stabbings, by Palestinian assailants.
Israeli police have already erected a barrier between the Jewish neighbourhood of Armon Hanatziv from the adjacent Jabel Mukaber, from where a number of Palestinian attackers came.
Israel has deployed thousands of police, backed up by troops, to maintain order around the country over the past few weeks.
Those measures, however, have so far failed to stop the violence.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f16648bdd448b375501b036e7fa4557d
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

(19 Oct 2015) Israeli security forces placed a guard post in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Jabel Mukaber in East Jerusalem on Monday, as part of the heightened security effort following a spate of attacks, mostly stabbings, by Palestinian assailants.
Israeli police have already erected a barrier between the Jewish neighbourhood of Armon Hanatziv from the adjacent Jabel Mukaber, from where a number of Palestinian attackers came.
Israel has deployed thousands of police, backed up by troops, to maintain order around the country over the past few weeks.
Those measures, however, have so far failed to stop the violence.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f16648bdd448b375501b036e7fa4557d
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION
Gaza City, Gaza Strip
1. Various of sweet stand at market
2. Close up of sweets
3. Man shopping for sweets
4. Woman at market
5. Close up of bag with sweets
6. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Abdul Nasser Nashwan, Gaza resident:
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult."
7. Close up of snacks
8. Mid of nuts stand
9. People working in market
Jerusalem
10. Wide of Al-Aqsa mosque
11. Mid of entrance to mosque
12. Close up of Muslim worshipper reading Quran inside mosque
13. Mid of street vendor in east Jerusalem alley
14. Shop owner standing in traditional pastry shop
15. Close up of pastries
16. Mid of sweets stand
Ramallah, West Bank
17. Mid of toy vendor
18. Children looking at dolls
19. Close up of girl choosing doll
20. Family walking in market
21. Women buying peaches
22. Man buying socks
23. Close up of baby
24. People choosing shirts
25. Girl walking with balloon
26. Mid of fruit stand
27. Women looking at shoes at market
28. Queue at shop selling nuts
29. Close up of girl inside shop
30. Wide of square in Ramallah
STORYLINE
Market traders across Jerusalem, the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip stocked up on sweets as people prepared for Eid al-Fitr, the Muslim holiday marking the end of Ramadan.
The celebrations last for three days and are a time for family gatherings and exchanging gifts.
The holiday atmosphere however, was muted in Gaza Strip, after the overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt led the new regime to close the Gaza-Egypt border, driving up prices.
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult" said Gaza resident Abdul Nasser Nashwan.
Thousands of workers in already blighted Gaza have been laid off because Egypt has closed the border, while some of the tens of thousands of Palestinians studying and working in Egypt are keeping a low profile for fear being targeted in an anti-Hamas backlash.
Egypt's new rulers have portrayed Hamas and Mohammed Morsi as co-conspirators in a plot to destabilise Egypt and harm the country's interests.
Elsewhere in Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah, there was a more festive atmosphere.
Outdoor markets were filled with Palestinian shoppers stocking up on sweets, presents and new clothes ahead of the festival.
The Eid holiday begins on the first day of the month of Shawal, the tenth month of the lunar Islamic calendar.
There are however, regional differences in the exact timing of Eid due to different interpretations of the lunar calendar.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d844afbae3f56efd41971d21dd941806
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION
Gaza City, Gaza Strip
1. Various of sweet stand at market
2. Close up of sweets
3. Man shopping for sweets
4. Woman at market
5. Close up of bag with sweets
6. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Abdul Nasser Nashwan, Gaza resident:
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult."
7. Close up of snacks
8. Mid of nuts stand
9. People working in market
Jerusalem
10. Wide of Al-Aqsa mosque
11. Mid of entrance to mosque
12. Close up of Muslim worshipper reading Quran inside mosque
13. Mid of street vendor in east Jerusalem alley
14. Shop owner standing in traditional pastry shop
15. Close up of pastries
16. Mid of sweets stand
Ramallah, West Bank
17. Mid of toy vendor
18. Children looking at dolls
19. Close up of girl choosing doll
20. Family walking in market
21. Women buying peaches
22. Man buying socks
23. Close up of baby
24. People choosing shirts
25. Girl walking with balloon
26. Mid of fruit stand
27. Women looking at shoes at market
28. Queue at shop selling nuts
29. Close up of girl inside shop
30. Wide of square in Ramallah
STORYLINE
Market traders across Jerusalem, the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip stocked up on sweets as people prepared for Eid al-Fitr, the Muslim holiday marking the end of Ramadan.
The celebrations last for three days and are a time for family gatherings and exchanging gifts.
The holiday atmosphere however, was muted in Gaza Strip, after the overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt led the new regime to close the Gaza-Egypt border, driving up prices.
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult" said Gaza resident Abdul Nasser Nashwan.
Thousands of workers in already blighted Gaza have been laid off because Egypt has closed the border, while some of the tens of thousands of Palestinians studying and working in Egypt are keeping a low profile for fear being targeted in an anti-Hamas backlash.
Egypt's new rulers have portrayed Hamas and Mohammed Morsi as co-conspirators in a plot to destabilise Egypt and harm the country's interests.
Elsewhere in Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah, there was a more festive atmosphere.
Outdoor markets were filled with Palestinian shoppers stocking up on sweets, presents and new clothes ahead of the festival.
The Eid holiday begins on the first day of the month of Shawal, the tenth month of the lunar Islamic calendar.
There are however, regional differences in the exact timing of Eid due to different interpretations of the lunar calendar.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d844afbae3f56efd41971d21dd941806
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Episode one of the Strangerstan blog by Serge Kharytonau. A quick insight into daily life of Machane YehudaMarket in Jerusalem, Israel. The market is commonly known as the Shuk, and is the largest marketplace in Jerusalem, Israel.
More than 250 vendors sell fresh goods here: fruits, vegetables, bakery, beers, wines, liquors, falafel, shawarma, kibbeh, kebab, shashlik, kanafeh, baklava, fish, meat, cheeses, nuts, seeds, spices, halva, zalabiya, apparel, shoes, housewares, textiles, and whatever else!
The music is generously provided by Yossi 'Yuc Beats' Steinman (Los Angeles, the United States). Go check out their profile for more groovy sounds: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3Bd6MLIjhbnJJ1kdmbJWDA

Episode one of the Strangerstan blog by Serge Kharytonau. A quick insight into daily life of Machane YehudaMarket in Jerusalem, Israel. The market is commonly known as the Shuk, and is the largest marketplace in Jerusalem, Israel.
More than 250 vendors sell fresh goods here: fruits, vegetables, bakery, beers, wines, liquors, falafel, shawarma, kibbeh, kebab, shashlik, kanafeh, baklava, fish, meat, cheeses, nuts, seeds, spices, halva, zalabiya, apparel, shoes, housewares, textiles, and whatever else!
The music is generously provided by Yossi 'Yuc Beats' Steinman (Los Angeles, the United States). Go check out their profile for more groovy sounds: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3Bd6MLIjhbnJJ1kdmbJWDA

Zoltan Kodaly (1882 - 1967):
JESUS AND THE TRADERS
(Jézus és a kufárok)
Zoltán Kodály was a Hungarian composer, ethnomusicologist, pedagogue, linguist, and philosopher. He is best known internationally as the creator of the Kodály Method.
Kodály wrote this choral piece for 4-part choir in 1934. The text is based on bible verses: The story about Jesus arriving in Jerusalem, where he drives the traders out of the temple. In Mark (chapter 11, 15-18) the incident is described as follows:
And they come to Jerusalem: and Jesus went into the temple, and began to cast out them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves;
And would not suffer that any man should carry any vessel through the temple.
And he taught, saying unto them, Is it not written, My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer? but ye have made it a den of thieves.
And the scribes and chief priests heard it, and sought how they might destroy him: for they feared him, because all the people was astonished at his doctrine.
DebrecenKodalyChorus
Conducted by Péter Erdei

Zoltan Kodaly (1882 - 1967):
JESUS AND THE TRADERS
(Jézus és a kufárok)
Zoltán Kodály was a Hungarian composer, ethnomusicologist, pedagogue, linguist, and philosopher. He is best known internationally as the creator of the Kodály Method.
Kodály wrote this choral piece for 4-part choir in 1934. The text is based on bible verses: The story about Jesus arriving in Jerusalem, where he drives the traders out of the temple. In Mark (chapter 11, 15-18) the incident is described as follows:
And they come to Jerusalem: and Jesus went into the temple, and began to cast out them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves;
And would not suffer that any man should carry any vessel through the temple.
And he taught, saying unto them, Is it not written, My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer? but ye have made it a den of thieves.
And the scribes and chief priests heard it, and sought how they might destroy him: for they feared him, because all the people was astonished at his doctrine.
DebrecenKodalyChorus
Conducted by Péter Erdei

Jerusalem Travel Guide: Everything you need to know

JerusalemTravelGuide: Everything you need to know. This is your ULTIMATE Jerusalem Travel guide. Jerusalem is an incredible city filled with beautiful sights, sounds and smells. Today we visited all of the most important sight within the Old City and New. As well we show you where you HAVE to go when your here.
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✔ Join the family! Become a CLATT today! New travel videos every Tuesday Thursday and Sunday at 3PM EST!
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Jerusalem Travel Guide - All you need to know! (2018)

Planning to visit Jerusalem? All the important information - http://www.travelingisrael.com/jerusalem-itinerary/
Best Hostels - http://www.travelingisrael.com/best-hostels-jerusalem/
Best Hotels - http://www.travelingisrael.com/recommended-hotels-jerusalem/
Guest Houses in the Old City of Jerusalem - http://www.travelingisrael.com/guest-houses-old-city-jerusalem/
My booklets on Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Day-tour-Jerusalem-Judaean-Desert/dp/965766702X

published: 08 Feb 2017

Amazing Jerusalem- Tour of the Old City

I'm taking you on a trip to this incredible old city beginning with the Main gate towards the old market passing in Via Dolorosa then visiting the Al Aqsa Mosque then the Sepulcre Church and finally to the Western Wall.. Will end this video buy showing you Jerusalem from the mount of Olives and the Dead Sea view from the hills of the sacred city.
Enjoy these trips with me to the Holy Land
If you have any questions or doubts please comment or send me a message to the inbox
My facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/LearnArabicWithMaha/389585995199
CANALE ITALIANO : http://www.youtube.com/user/Araboconmaha?feature=mhee
Want to appear in my videos and chat with me in SKYPE? You have to be a Subscriber of my 2 channels and write a comment/private msg with your Skype ID :) I might ...

Rick Steves' The Holy Land: Israelis and Palestinians Today

More info at https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/video/tv-show/tv-specials/holy-land This hour-long special weaves together both the Israeli and the Palestinian narratives. In Israel, we go from the venerable ramparts of Jerusalem to the vibrant modern skyline of Tel Aviv. In Palestine, we harvest olives near Hebron, visit a home in Bethlehem, and pop into a university in Ramallah. We also learn about security walls, disputed settlements, and the persistent challenges facing the region.

JERUSALEM | THE OLD CITY - A TRAVEL TOUR - HD 1080P

A walking tour around the old city of Jerusalem.
Official website and blog: http://globetrotteralpha.com/
Join us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GlobeTrotterAlphaTravels/
Check us out on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/globetrotteralphatravels/
Help me create the next travel videos by showing your support: https://www.patreon.com/globetrotteralpha
The film chronologically progresses from morning to the small hours of the night, showing daily life.
For those planning on visiting, those who’d like to visit but cannot or those who might be nostalgic and want to re-live their past visits / life there, hopefully this film shall satisfy, time and time again. A person MUST experience the city at least once in their lifetime.
Simply wandering the streets of the Old City while c...

Israel Travel Guide: Everything you need to know

This is a guide to all things Israel. I love this country and everything it has to offer! The food the people the landscapes. So grab some falafel and hummus or maybe a shakshuka, everything will be sababa. Sit back relax and yalla enjoy Israel!
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pattyperk
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published: 18 Sep 2015

Jerusalem, Israel: Jewish Quarter and New City

More info about travel to Jerusalem: https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/read/articles/fabled-jerusalem In Jerusalem’s New City, we appreciate this culture’s fascinating mix of east and west, secular and sacred, modern and traditional. While it’s not convenient or economical to live in the medieval tangle of the Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem, Israel, devout Jews find great joy in living and raising their families so close to the Western Wall.
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.

published: 13 Apr 2016

72 hours in Jerusalem (By a professional tour guide)

If you are traveling to Jerusalem, this video will show you all the important things you need to know. Here is the post with all the information -
http://www.travelingisrael.com/72-hours-jerusalem-best-itinerary/
My booklets on Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Day-tour-Jerusalem-Judaean-Desert/dp/965766702X

published: 06 Dec 2017

Tel Aviv Travel Guide- The Carmel Market

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TravelTel Aviv best market. Visit and experience Israel atmosphere in Tel Aviv HaCarmel Market.
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Tel Aviv the best city in the middle east and the gay capital in the region.
The best time to travel Israel is between April to October. perfect temperature for the beach and to walk around the city.
visit Jerusalem - only 45 min by bus from Tel Aviv. you can also make a one day tour to the holy city and to the dead see.
The Carmel market is only 5 in walk to Tel Aviv beach, so you can visit both of these places at the time. you can also visit Nchalat Binyam...

published: 16 Feb 2017

Jerusalem City Guide: 24 hours in the holy city // Your Little Black Book

Van super mooie bezichtigingen tot de lekkerste restaurants! 24 uur in Jeruzalem? Ik neem je mee naar de leukste plekjes. Veel kijkplezier! Liefs, Anne
SUBSCRIBE & FEED YOUR WANDERLUST ► http://bit.ly/yourlbbtv
►Interested in a collaboration with Your Little Black Book? Send Anne an e-mail via anne@yourlittleblackbook.me
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ABOUT YOUR LITTLE BLACK BOOK
YOURLBB.TV is the YouTube platform from Amsterdam based travel blog Your Little Black Book, the largest travel blog of The Netherlands founded by Anne de Buck for everyone who has the wanderlust gen and loves to travel the world. Anne is also the author of the books Wanderlust (the first travel lifestyle guide in the world) and The Amsterdam CityGuide.
Recently Your Little Black Book also released an Amster...

Things to do in Israel | Top Attractions Travel Guide

When you think of traveling to Israel visiting religious sites in Jerusalem or basing yourself in Tel Aviv may initially come to mind. However, when exploring Israel it is paramount to set aside enough time to get off the beaten path and explore more of the country. Fortunately, for us, we were able to make two separate trips to Israel experiencing as much food, culture, historical and modern attractions as we possibly could.
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JerusalemTravelGuide: Everything you need to know. This is your ULTIMATE Jerusalem Travel guide. Jerusalem is an incredible city filled with beautiful sights, sounds and smells. Today we visited all of the most important sight within the Old City and New. As well we show you where you HAVE to go when your here.
Cool rewards on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/thetravelingclatt
✔ Join the family! Become a CLATT today! New travel videos every Tuesday Thursday and Sunday at 3PM EST!
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JerusalemTravelGuide: Everything you need to know. This is your ULTIMATE Jerusalem Travel guide. Jerusalem is an incredible city filled with beautiful sights, sounds and smells. Today we visited all of the most important sight within the Old City and New. As well we show you where you HAVE to go when your here.
Cool rewards on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/thetravelingclatt
✔ Join the family! Become a CLATT today! New travel videos every Tuesday Thursday and Sunday at 3PM EST!
///CONNECT WITH ME///
Instagram: https://instagram.com/thetravelingclatt
Twitter: https://twitter.com/travelingclatt
Facebook: http://goo.gl/JdlfLd
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/thetravelingclatt
Podcast: http://goo.gl/e7E73B
///TRAVEL DISCOUNTS FOR THE CLATTS///
$40 off an Airbnb!
www.airbnb.com/c/talo27
Get a free ride with Uber!
https://www.uber.com/invite/talo5
///MY GEAR///
BigCamera: http://amzn.to/2tv6jCE
Lens for Big Camera: http://amzn.to/2uuDKSn
Microphone for Big Camera: http://amzn.to/2tAyjoJ
GoPro: http://amzn.to/2sceNuB
Drone: http://amzn.to/2sckqbV
Tripod: http://amzn.to/2twFP3a
Computer: http://amzn.to/2srZPon
HardDrive: http://amzn.to/2tv4ANn
Backpack: http://amzn.to/2t2J8yr
///MUSIC///
Check 'em out for being awesome enough to let me use their music!
Chillhop
Bandcamp » https://chillhop.bandcamp.com/album/chillhop-essentials-spring-2016
Spotify » https://open.spotify.com/album/0Q9XLzqv1wRvrouX5k814k

Jerusalem Travel Guide - All you need to know! (2018)

Planning to visit Jerusalem? All the important information - http://www.travelingisrael.com/jerusalem-itinerary/
Best Hostels - http://www.travelingisrael.com/...

Planning to visit Jerusalem? All the important information - http://www.travelingisrael.com/jerusalem-itinerary/
Best Hostels - http://www.travelingisrael.com/best-hostels-jerusalem/
Best Hotels - http://www.travelingisrael.com/recommended-hotels-jerusalem/
Guest Houses in the Old City of Jerusalem - http://www.travelingisrael.com/guest-houses-old-city-jerusalem/
My booklets on Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Day-tour-Jerusalem-Judaean-Desert/dp/965766702X

Planning to visit Jerusalem? All the important information - http://www.travelingisrael.com/jerusalem-itinerary/
Best Hostels - http://www.travelingisrael.com/best-hostels-jerusalem/
Best Hotels - http://www.travelingisrael.com/recommended-hotels-jerusalem/
Guest Houses in the Old City of Jerusalem - http://www.travelingisrael.com/guest-houses-old-city-jerusalem/
My booklets on Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Day-tour-Jerusalem-Judaean-Desert/dp/965766702X

Amazing Jerusalem- Tour of the Old City

I'm taking you on a trip to this incredible old city beginning with the Main gate towards the old market passing in Via Dolorosa then visiting the Al Aqsa Mosqu...

I'm taking you on a trip to this incredible old city beginning with the Main gate towards the old market passing in Via Dolorosa then visiting the Al Aqsa Mosque then the Sepulcre Church and finally to the Western Wall.. Will end this video buy showing you Jerusalem from the mount of Olives and the Dead Sea view from the hills of the sacred city.
Enjoy these trips with me to the Holy Land
If you have any questions or doubts please comment or send me a message to the inbox
My facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/LearnArabicWithMaha/389585995199
CANALE ITALIANO : http://www.youtube.com/user/Araboconmaha?feature=mhee
Want to appear in my videos and chat with me in SKYPE? You have to be a Subscriber of my 2 channels and write a comment/private msg with your Skype ID :) I might give you a call one of these days ;)

I'm taking you on a trip to this incredible old city beginning with the Main gate towards the old market passing in Via Dolorosa then visiting the Al Aqsa Mosque then the Sepulcre Church and finally to the Western Wall.. Will end this video buy showing you Jerusalem from the mount of Olives and the Dead Sea view from the hills of the sacred city.
Enjoy these trips with me to the Holy Land
If you have any questions or doubts please comment or send me a message to the inbox
My facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/LearnArabicWithMaha/389585995199
CANALE ITALIANO : http://www.youtube.com/user/Araboconmaha?feature=mhee
Want to appear in my videos and chat with me in SKYPE? You have to be a Subscriber of my 2 channels and write a comment/private msg with your Skype ID :) I might give you a call one of these days ;)

Rick Steves' The Holy Land: Israelis and Palestinians Today

More info at https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/video/tv-show/tv-specials/holy-land This hour-long special weaves together both the Israeli and the Pa...

More info at https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/video/tv-show/tv-specials/holy-land This hour-long special weaves together both the Israeli and the Palestinian narratives. In Israel, we go from the venerable ramparts of Jerusalem to the vibrant modern skyline of Tel Aviv. In Palestine, we harvest olives near Hebron, visit a home in Bethlehem, and pop into a university in Ramallah. We also learn about security walls, disputed settlements, and the persistent challenges facing the region.

More info at https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/video/tv-show/tv-specials/holy-land This hour-long special weaves together both the Israeli and the Palestinian narratives. In Israel, we go from the venerable ramparts of Jerusalem to the vibrant modern skyline of Tel Aviv. In Palestine, we harvest olives near Hebron, visit a home in Bethlehem, and pop into a university in Ramallah. We also learn about security walls, disputed settlements, and the persistent challenges facing the region.

Episode Guide for Jerusalem with List of Attractions: http://www.diytravelshow.com/jerusalem
This episode of DIY Destinations featuring Jerusalem, and its FREE, must-see attractions within all four Quarters of Old City Jerusalem, such as Western Wall, Cardo, Herod's Gate, Ecce Homo, Temple Mount, Archaeological Park, Dome of the Rock, Al-Aqsa Mosque, Damascus gate and more. The program also show you how to cheaply get from Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv to Old City Jerusalem, transportation options and where to eat for cheap. #DIYTRAVELSHOW
Our mission is to create a free publicly funded travel series that is delivered through streaming and file sharing sites. Our goal is to take fear out of traveling and inspire our audience to go far and explore the magnificent planet earth inexpensive and safely.
We want all of us to creating connections with new people, experiencing other cultures and gaining a greater understanding of each other by offer a unique perspective of traveling on a budget.
Please like and subscribed on:
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/diytravelshow
Twitter - https://twitter.com/diytravelshow
Pinterest - https://www.pinterest.com/diytravelshow/
Our website - http://www.diytravelshow.com

Episode Guide for Jerusalem with List of Attractions: http://www.diytravelshow.com/jerusalem
This episode of DIY Destinations featuring Jerusalem, and its FREE, must-see attractions within all four Quarters of Old City Jerusalem, such as Western Wall, Cardo, Herod's Gate, Ecce Homo, Temple Mount, Archaeological Park, Dome of the Rock, Al-Aqsa Mosque, Damascus gate and more. The program also show you how to cheaply get from Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv to Old City Jerusalem, transportation options and where to eat for cheap. #DIYTRAVELSHOW
Our mission is to create a free publicly funded travel series that is delivered through streaming and file sharing sites. Our goal is to take fear out of traveling and inspire our audience to go far and explore the magnificent planet earth inexpensive and safely.
We want all of us to creating connections with new people, experiencing other cultures and gaining a greater understanding of each other by offer a unique perspective of traveling on a budget.
Please like and subscribed on:
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/diytravelshow
Twitter - https://twitter.com/diytravelshow
Pinterest - https://www.pinterest.com/diytravelshow/
Our website - http://www.diytravelshow.com

A walking tour around the old city of Jerusalem.
Official website and blog: http://globetrotteralpha.com/
Join us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GlobeTrotterAlphaTravels/
Check us out on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/globetrotteralphatravels/
Help me create the next travel videos by showing your support: https://www.patreon.com/globetrotteralpha
The film chronologically progresses from morning to the small hours of the night, showing daily life.
For those planning on visiting, those who’d like to visit but cannot or those who might be nostalgic and want to re-live their past visits / life there, hopefully this film shall satisfy, time and time again. A person MUST experience the city at least once in their lifetime.
Simply wandering the streets of the Old City while capturing the ambiance, historical sites, smells and different people will leave you with unforgettable experiences and a lifetime of amazing memories.
Filmed in December 2010.
For more information on the Old City of Jerusalem:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_City_(Jerusalem)
Google Maps:
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Jerusalem,+Israel/@31.8031685,35.1590849,11z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x1502d7d634c1fc4b:0xd96f623e456ee1cb
Filming Equipment:
Camera:
- Sony HDR-AX2000
Camera Accessories:
- Glidecam 'SmoothShooter' body mounted camera stabilization system.
- Glidecam HD-4000 hand-held camera stabilization.
- Sennheiser K6 module + ME66 shotgun microphone capsule.

A walking tour around the old city of Jerusalem.
Official website and blog: http://globetrotteralpha.com/
Join us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GlobeTrotterAlphaTravels/
Check us out on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/globetrotteralphatravels/
Help me create the next travel videos by showing your support: https://www.patreon.com/globetrotteralpha
The film chronologically progresses from morning to the small hours of the night, showing daily life.
For those planning on visiting, those who’d like to visit but cannot or those who might be nostalgic and want to re-live their past visits / life there, hopefully this film shall satisfy, time and time again. A person MUST experience the city at least once in their lifetime.
Simply wandering the streets of the Old City while capturing the ambiance, historical sites, smells and different people will leave you with unforgettable experiences and a lifetime of amazing memories.
Filmed in December 2010.
For more information on the Old City of Jerusalem:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_City_(Jerusalem)
Google Maps:
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Jerusalem,+Israel/@31.8031685,35.1590849,11z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x1502d7d634c1fc4b:0xd96f623e456ee1cb
Filming Equipment:
Camera:
- Sony HDR-AX2000
Camera Accessories:
- Glidecam 'SmoothShooter' body mounted camera stabilization system.
- Glidecam HD-4000 hand-held camera stabilization.
- Sennheiser K6 module + ME66 shotgun microphone capsule.

JerusalemTravelGuide: Located in the Judean Mountains between the Mediterranean Sea and the Dead Sea, Jerusalem is considered holy to the three major Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. It is the holiest city in Judaism and the spiritual center of the Jewish people since the 10th century BCE, the third-holiest in Islam and is also home to a number of significant and ancient Christian landmarks. It is also a city with a very violent past, as it was fiercely contested between Christianity and Islam during the brutal Crusade era. While the city has had a large Jewish majority since 1967, a wide range of national, religious, and socioeconomic groups are represented here. The walled area of Jerusalem, which until the late nineteenth century formed the entire city, is now called the Old City and became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982. It consists of four ethnic and religious sections — the Armenian, Christian, Jewish, and Muslim Quarters. Barely one square kilometer, the Old City is home to several of Jerusalem's most important and contested religious sites including the Western Wall and Temple Mount for Jews, the Dome of the Rock and al-Aqsa Mosque for Muslims, and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre for Christians.
Surrounding the Old City are more modern areas of Jerusalem. The civic and cultural center of modern Israel extends from western Jerusalem toward the country's other urban areas to the west, while areas populated mostly by Arabs can be found in the northern, eastern and southern districts.
Archaeological findings prove the existence of development within present-day Jerusalem as far back as the 4th millennium BCE, but the earliest written records of the city come in the Execration Texts (c. 19th century BCE) and the Amarna letters (c. 14th century BCE). According to Biblical accounts, the Jebusites, a Canaanite tribe, inhabited the area around the present-day city (under the name Jebus) until the late 11th century BCE. At that point (c. 1000s BCE), the Israelites, led by King David, invaded and conquered the city, expanding it southwards and establishing it as the capital of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah (the United Monarchy). It was renamed at this time as Yerushalayim (Jerusalem), a name by which it is still referred to today.
King David's reign over Jerusalem ended around 970 BCE when his son Solomon became the new king. Biblical sources state that within a decade Solomon started to build the first of two HolyTemples within city limits — Solomon's Temple (or the First Temple), a significant site in Jewish and Christian history as the last known location of the Ark of the Covenant. The period of the First Temple was marked by the division of the United Monarchy at the time of Solomon's death (c. 930 BCE) when the ten northern tribes, originally part of the Monarchy, split off to form the Kingdom of Israel. Under the leadership of the bloodline of David and Solomon, Jerusalem continued to act as the capital of the southern par of the split, the Kingdom of Judah. Later, with the Assyrian conquest of the Kingdom of Israel in 722 BCE, Jerusalem became the center of a Judah strengthened by the great number of Israeli refugees. In approximately 586 BCE, the Babylonians conquered the Kingdom of Judah including the city of Jerusalem, and the First Temple Period came to an end.
In 538 BCE, after fifty years of Babylonian captivity, the Jews were given permission from Persian KingCyrus the Great to return to Judah so they could rebuild Jerusalem and construct the Second Temple. The construction was completed in the year 516 BCE, seventy years after the destruction of the First Temple. Jerusalem regained its status as capital of Judah and center of Jewish worship for another four centuries, with a considerable portion of that period under Hasmonean rule. By 19 BCE, the Temple Mount was elevated and construction began on an expansion of the Second Temple under Herod the Great, a Jewish client king under Roman rule. In 6 CE, the city, as well as much of the surrounding area, came under direct Roman rule as the JudeaProvince. Still unchallenged, the Roman rule over Jerusalem and the region came to an end with the first Jewish-Roman war, the Great Jewish Revolt, which resulted in the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE. Jerusalem once again served as the national capital for the people of the region during the three-year rebellion known as Bar Kokhba's revolt. The Romans succeeded in sacking and recapturing the city in 135 CE and as a punitive measure, the Jews were banned from Jerusalem.
Enjoy your Jerusalem Travel Guide!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qb_XtsJCJI4

JerusalemTravelGuide: Located in the Judean Mountains between the Mediterranean Sea and the Dead Sea, Jerusalem is considered holy to the three major Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. It is the holiest city in Judaism and the spiritual center of the Jewish people since the 10th century BCE, the third-holiest in Islam and is also home to a number of significant and ancient Christian landmarks. It is also a city with a very violent past, as it was fiercely contested between Christianity and Islam during the brutal Crusade era. While the city has had a large Jewish majority since 1967, a wide range of national, religious, and socioeconomic groups are represented here. The walled area of Jerusalem, which until the late nineteenth century formed the entire city, is now called the Old City and became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982. It consists of four ethnic and religious sections — the Armenian, Christian, Jewish, and Muslim Quarters. Barely one square kilometer, the Old City is home to several of Jerusalem's most important and contested religious sites including the Western Wall and Temple Mount for Jews, the Dome of the Rock and al-Aqsa Mosque for Muslims, and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre for Christians.
Surrounding the Old City are more modern areas of Jerusalem. The civic and cultural center of modern Israel extends from western Jerusalem toward the country's other urban areas to the west, while areas populated mostly by Arabs can be found in the northern, eastern and southern districts.
Archaeological findings prove the existence of development within present-day Jerusalem as far back as the 4th millennium BCE, but the earliest written records of the city come in the Execration Texts (c. 19th century BCE) and the Amarna letters (c. 14th century BCE). According to Biblical accounts, the Jebusites, a Canaanite tribe, inhabited the area around the present-day city (under the name Jebus) until the late 11th century BCE. At that point (c. 1000s BCE), the Israelites, led by King David, invaded and conquered the city, expanding it southwards and establishing it as the capital of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah (the United Monarchy). It was renamed at this time as Yerushalayim (Jerusalem), a name by which it is still referred to today.
King David's reign over Jerusalem ended around 970 BCE when his son Solomon became the new king. Biblical sources state that within a decade Solomon started to build the first of two HolyTemples within city limits — Solomon's Temple (or the First Temple), a significant site in Jewish and Christian history as the last known location of the Ark of the Covenant. The period of the First Temple was marked by the division of the United Monarchy at the time of Solomon's death (c. 930 BCE) when the ten northern tribes, originally part of the Monarchy, split off to form the Kingdom of Israel. Under the leadership of the bloodline of David and Solomon, Jerusalem continued to act as the capital of the southern par of the split, the Kingdom of Judah. Later, with the Assyrian conquest of the Kingdom of Israel in 722 BCE, Jerusalem became the center of a Judah strengthened by the great number of Israeli refugees. In approximately 586 BCE, the Babylonians conquered the Kingdom of Judah including the city of Jerusalem, and the First Temple Period came to an end.
In 538 BCE, after fifty years of Babylonian captivity, the Jews were given permission from Persian KingCyrus the Great to return to Judah so they could rebuild Jerusalem and construct the Second Temple. The construction was completed in the year 516 BCE, seventy years after the destruction of the First Temple. Jerusalem regained its status as capital of Judah and center of Jewish worship for another four centuries, with a considerable portion of that period under Hasmonean rule. By 19 BCE, the Temple Mount was elevated and construction began on an expansion of the Second Temple under Herod the Great, a Jewish client king under Roman rule. In 6 CE, the city, as well as much of the surrounding area, came under direct Roman rule as the JudeaProvince. Still unchallenged, the Roman rule over Jerusalem and the region came to an end with the first Jewish-Roman war, the Great Jewish Revolt, which resulted in the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE. Jerusalem once again served as the national capital for the people of the region during the three-year rebellion known as Bar Kokhba's revolt. The Romans succeeded in sacking and recapturing the city in 135 CE and as a punitive measure, the Jews were banned from Jerusalem.
Enjoy your Jerusalem Travel Guide!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qb_XtsJCJI4

Israel Travel Guide: Everything you need to know

This is a guide to all things Israel. I love this country and everything it has to offer! The food the people the landscapes. So grab some falafel and hummus or...

This is a guide to all things Israel. I love this country and everything it has to offer! The food the people the landscapes. So grab some falafel and hummus or maybe a shakshuka, everything will be sababa. Sit back relax and yalla enjoy Israel!
✔ Join the family! Become a CLATT today!
☼ Connect with me on the interwebs!
✈Instagram✈
https://instagram.com/thetravelingclatt
✈Twitter✈
https://twitter.com/travelingclatt
✈Facebook✈
http://goo.gl/JdlfLd
✈Soundcloud✈
https://soundcloud.com/thetravelingclatt
✈Storie✈
TheTravelingClatt
(Use the #clatts if you want me to see somehting)
✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈
♫MUSIC♫
Check 'em out for being awesome enough to let me use their music!
pattyperk
https://soundcloud.com/pattyperk

This is a guide to all things Israel. I love this country and everything it has to offer! The food the people the landscapes. So grab some falafel and hummus or maybe a shakshuka, everything will be sababa. Sit back relax and yalla enjoy Israel!
✔ Join the family! Become a CLATT today!
☼ Connect with me on the interwebs!
✈Instagram✈
https://instagram.com/thetravelingclatt
✈Twitter✈
https://twitter.com/travelingclatt
✈Facebook✈
http://goo.gl/JdlfLd
✈Soundcloud✈
https://soundcloud.com/thetravelingclatt
✈Storie✈
TheTravelingClatt
(Use the #clatts if you want me to see somehting)
✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈✈
♫MUSIC♫
Check 'em out for being awesome enough to let me use their music!
pattyperk
https://soundcloud.com/pattyperk

Jerusalem, Israel: Jewish Quarter and New City

More info about travel to Jerusalem: https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/read/articles/fabled-jerusalem In Jerusalem’s New City, we appreciate this cul...

More info about travel to Jerusalem: https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/read/articles/fabled-jerusalem In Jerusalem’s New City, we appreciate this culture’s fascinating mix of east and west, secular and sacred, modern and traditional. While it’s not convenient or economical to live in the medieval tangle of the Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem, Israel, devout Jews find great joy in living and raising their families so close to the Western Wall.
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.

More info about travel to Jerusalem: https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/read/articles/fabled-jerusalem In Jerusalem’s New City, we appreciate this culture’s fascinating mix of east and west, secular and sacred, modern and traditional. While it’s not convenient or economical to live in the medieval tangle of the Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem, Israel, devout Jews find great joy in living and raising their families so close to the Western Wall.
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.

72 hours in Jerusalem (By a professional tour guide)

If you are traveling to Jerusalem, this video will show you all the important things you need to know. Here is the post with all the information -
http://www.t...

If you are traveling to Jerusalem, this video will show you all the important things you need to know. Here is the post with all the information -
http://www.travelingisrael.com/72-hours-jerusalem-best-itinerary/
My booklets on Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Day-tour-Jerusalem-Judaean-Desert/dp/965766702X

If you are traveling to Jerusalem, this video will show you all the important things you need to know. Here is the post with all the information -
http://www.travelingisrael.com/72-hours-jerusalem-best-itinerary/
My booklets on Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Day-tour-Jerusalem-Judaean-Desert/dp/965766702X

Van super mooie bezichtigingen tot de lekkerste restaurants! 24 uur in Jeruzalem? Ik neem je mee naar de leukste plekjes. Veel kijkplezier! Liefs, Anne
SUBSCRIBE & FEED YOUR WANDERLUST ► http://bit.ly/yourlbbtv
►Interested in a collaboration with Your Little Black Book? Send Anne an e-mail via anne@yourlittleblackbook.me
✈------✈------✈------✈------✈
ABOUT YOUR LITTLE BLACK BOOK
YOURLBB.TV is the YouTube platform from Amsterdam based travel blog Your Little Black Book, the largest travel blog of The Netherlands founded by Anne de Buck for everyone who has the wanderlust gen and loves to travel the world. Anne is also the author of the books Wanderlust (the first travel lifestyle guide in the world) and The Amsterdam CityGuide.
Recently Your Little Black Book also released an Amsterdam City Guide app with over 700 "Yourlbb approved” addresses that you can download for a small fee in the app stores (ANDROID: http://bit.ly/androidyourlbb & IOS: http://bit.ly/iosyourlbb)
On YOURLBB.TV you can watch travel video's about the latest hotspots in Amsterdam and Amsterdam travel tips for everyone who wants to go where the locals go.
Your Little Black Book travels to destinations all over the world and on this channel you find travel guides and city guides for many other destinations! From Los Angeles to Cape Verde and from New York to Nusa Lembongan near Bali. Anne collects the best hotspots from around the world in her travel vlogs.
In the personal vlogs Anne gives viewers a weekly sneak peek behind the scenes at Your Little Black Book and she takes you with her on her daily adventure.
Don't want to miss it? Don't forget to subscribe! http://bit.ly/yourlbbtv
✈------✈------✈------✈------✈
►BLOG: http://www.yourlittleblackbook.me/
BOOKS:
► WANDERLUST: http://bit.ly/wanderlust-yourlbb
► THE AMSTERDAM CITYGUIDE: http://bit.ly/cityguide-yourlbb-en
AMSTERDAM CITY GUIDE APP:
► ANDROID AMSTERDAM APP: http://bit.ly/androidyourlbb
► IOS AMSTERDAM APP: http://bit.ly/iosyourlbb
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► PINTEREST: https://www.pinterest.com/yourLBB/
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ABOUT YOUR LITTLE BLACK BOOK
Your Little Black Book is the largest urban travel blog of The Netherlands, with thousands of Amsterdam tips and hundreds of travel guids. Founder Anne de Buck travels all around the globe for the platform, and finds herself in a different city almost every week in her search for the best hotspots or culinary addresses. All those tips can be found in the travel guides of Your Little Black Book.
The platform reaches over 272.000 unique visitors every month (measured september 2017), who are responsible for over 928.400 page views. In 2016 Anne has released her first two books, Wanderlust and The Amsterdam City Guide which were followed with the Amsterdam City Guide app for iOS and Android that was released in 2017 (ANDROID http://bit.ly/androidyourlbb & IOS http://bit.ly/iosyourlbb).
► Interested in a collaboration with Your Little Black Book? Send Anne an e-mail via anne@yourlittleblackbook.me

Van super mooie bezichtigingen tot de lekkerste restaurants! 24 uur in Jeruzalem? Ik neem je mee naar de leukste plekjes. Veel kijkplezier! Liefs, Anne
SUBSCRIBE & FEED YOUR WANDERLUST ► http://bit.ly/yourlbbtv
►Interested in a collaboration with Your Little Black Book? Send Anne an e-mail via anne@yourlittleblackbook.me
✈------✈------✈------✈------✈
ABOUT YOUR LITTLE BLACK BOOK
YOURLBB.TV is the YouTube platform from Amsterdam based travel blog Your Little Black Book, the largest travel blog of The Netherlands founded by Anne de Buck for everyone who has the wanderlust gen and loves to travel the world. Anne is also the author of the books Wanderlust (the first travel lifestyle guide in the world) and The Amsterdam CityGuide.
Recently Your Little Black Book also released an Amsterdam City Guide app with over 700 "Yourlbb approved” addresses that you can download for a small fee in the app stores (ANDROID: http://bit.ly/androidyourlbb & IOS: http://bit.ly/iosyourlbb)
On YOURLBB.TV you can watch travel video's about the latest hotspots in Amsterdam and Amsterdam travel tips for everyone who wants to go where the locals go.
Your Little Black Book travels to destinations all over the world and on this channel you find travel guides and city guides for many other destinations! From Los Angeles to Cape Verde and from New York to Nusa Lembongan near Bali. Anne collects the best hotspots from around the world in her travel vlogs.
In the personal vlogs Anne gives viewers a weekly sneak peek behind the scenes at Your Little Black Book and she takes you with her on her daily adventure.
Don't want to miss it? Don't forget to subscribe! http://bit.ly/yourlbbtv
✈------✈------✈------✈------✈
►BLOG: http://www.yourlittleblackbook.me/
BOOKS:
► WANDERLUST: http://bit.ly/wanderlust-yourlbb
► THE AMSTERDAM CITYGUIDE: http://bit.ly/cityguide-yourlbb-en
AMSTERDAM CITY GUIDE APP:
► ANDROID AMSTERDAM APP: http://bit.ly/androidyourlbb
► IOS AMSTERDAM APP: http://bit.ly/iosyourlbb
► INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/yourlbb
► FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/yourLBB
► TWITTER: https://twitter.com/yourlbb
► GOOGLE+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+yourlbb
► PINTEREST: https://www.pinterest.com/yourLBB/
✈------✈------✈------✈------✈
ABOUT YOUR LITTLE BLACK BOOK
Your Little Black Book is the largest urban travel blog of The Netherlands, with thousands of Amsterdam tips and hundreds of travel guids. Founder Anne de Buck travels all around the globe for the platform, and finds herself in a different city almost every week in her search for the best hotspots or culinary addresses. All those tips can be found in the travel guides of Your Little Black Book.
The platform reaches over 272.000 unique visitors every month (measured september 2017), who are responsible for over 928.400 page views. In 2016 Anne has released her first two books, Wanderlust and The Amsterdam City Guide which were followed with the Amsterdam City Guide app for iOS and Android that was released in 2017 (ANDROID http://bit.ly/androidyourlbb & IOS http://bit.ly/iosyourlbb).
► Interested in a collaboration with Your Little Black Book? Send Anne an e-mail via anne@yourlittleblackbook.me

Things to do in Israel | Top Attractions Travel Guide

When you think of traveling to Israel visiting religious sites in Jerusalem or basing yourself in Tel Aviv may initially come to mind. However, when exploring ...

When you think of traveling to Israel visiting religious sites in Jerusalem or basing yourself in Tel Aviv may initially come to mind. However, when exploring Israel it is paramount to set aside enough time to get off the beaten path and explore more of the country. Fortunately, for us, we were able to make two separate trips to Israel experiencing as much food, culture, historical and modern attractions as we possibly could.
GEAR WE USEOlympus OM-D E-M5 II: http://amzn.to/1OchS7t
Canon G7X: http://amzn.to/1YdjsYX
Olympus 14-150mm II Lens: http://amzn.to/1Y79zeM
Rode Video Mic GO: http://amzn.to/1WDKtVM
Joby Gorilla Pod: http://amzn.to/1PgoY5F
SanDisk 16GB Extreme Pro: http://amzn.to/25KEErs
SOCIAL MEDIA & TRAVEL BLOGS
AUDREY:
blog: http://thatbackpacker.com/
instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thatbackpac...
facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thatbackpacker
twitter: https://twitter.com/ThatBackpacker
SAMUEL:
blog: http://nomadicsamuel.com/
facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nomadicsamuel
twitter: https://twitter.com/NomadicSamuel
instragram: https://www.instagram.com/nomadicsamuel/
The following is a list of things to do in Israel with a focus on the top attractions in this travel guide:
1) Regardless of whether you can swim (or not swim) well you will most certainly float when visiting the Dead Sea. Covering yourself in gooey mud and joining others floating is one of the top attractions in Israel.
2) No trip to Israel would be complete without sampling the local cuisine and especially the street food. With this in mind we walked all the way from our hotel room in Tel Aviv to Jaffa - an ancient city renowned for its amazing hummus and other street food. Aside from just hummus we were able to try Shaksouka, cheese stuffed pastries, malabi and kanafeh.
3) Having the opportunity to take a tour of the West Bank (or Palestine) is an eye opening experience. Media coverage, from the perspective of the west, often depicts this area as being quite unruly and poor; however, a tour there really dispels a lot of myths. We had the opportunity to eat falafel, walking around the streets and get a real sense of what life is like in this region. Some highlights included visiting Sheppard's Field, the Jordan River and oldest city in the world - Jericho. To end our trip we drank beer at the West Bank Palestinian brewery.
4) Getting off the beaten track a little we visited Rosh Hanikra. Known as the window to the Mediterranean we were treated to breathtaking views and an amazing sunset.
5) Aside from just eating our way around Jaffa, we took the time to properly explore it on foot. One of the top highlights was visiting a traditional flea market,
6) Taking the cable car up to visit Masada was a welcome relief considering how hot it was on the day we visited. As we wandered about we visited an old water cistern and Byzantine church.
7) Caesarea! The ruins of the ancient city once given from AgusCaesar to Harrod the Great was an experience we'll never forget. Walking around in the Hippodrome allowed me to visualize what the old chariot races must have been like.
8) One of my favorite meals in Israel was prepared by a Druze family. This amazing feast, in the form of a buffet, featured kebabs, olives, chicken and stuffed cabbage just to name a few.
9) Wondering wear to rest your sleepy head while traveling in Israel? Look no further than the Fauzi Azar Inn in Nazareth. This converted ArabMansion.
10) One of the more frontier attractions was visiting Golan Heights and the Sea of Galilee. We toured around the BaniasReserve and Mount Bental.
11) Considering how tasty the food is in Israel it would be a shame to leave without knowing how to recreate these delectable delights back home in your own kitchen. Fortunately, for us, we were able to take a cooking class at Dan Gourmet in Tel Aviv. We learned how to make Lahmacun and charred eggplant amongst other dishes.
12) Have you ever wondered how olive oil is made? Visiting an olive press answered our all of our questions and made us appreciate the craft of making this high quality cooking oil. For the best vantage point of Nazareth we headed to Mount Precipice for panoramic 360 degree views. Finally, we visited Haifa to check out the famous Bahá'í gardens.
כאשר אתה חושב על הנסיעה לישראל לבקר באתרים דתיים בירושלים או מבססת את עצמך בתל אביב עשוי בתחילה מגיע אל המוח. עם זאת, כאשר בוחנים ישראל אותו הוא בעל חשיבות עליונה להפריש מספיק זמן כדי לקבל את השביל הכבושולחקור יותר של המדינה. למרבה המזל, עבורנו, שהיינו מסוגל לעשות את שתי נסיעות נפרדות לישראל נתקל בכמה שיותר אוכל, תרבות, היסטורי ואטרקציות מודרניות כפי שאנו יכולים להיות.
This is part of our Travel in Israel series showcasing Israeli culture, Israeli arts & Israeli foods.
This video features music -various artists and various songs - available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Commercial license.

When you think of traveling to Israel visiting religious sites in Jerusalem or basing yourself in Tel Aviv may initially come to mind. However, when exploring Israel it is paramount to set aside enough time to get off the beaten path and explore more of the country. Fortunately, for us, we were able to make two separate trips to Israel experiencing as much food, culture, historical and modern attractions as we possibly could.
GEAR WE USEOlympus OM-D E-M5 II: http://amzn.to/1OchS7t
Canon G7X: http://amzn.to/1YdjsYX
Olympus 14-150mm II Lens: http://amzn.to/1Y79zeM
Rode Video Mic GO: http://amzn.to/1WDKtVM
Joby Gorilla Pod: http://amzn.to/1PgoY5F
SanDisk 16GB Extreme Pro: http://amzn.to/25KEErs
SOCIAL MEDIA & TRAVEL BLOGS
AUDREY:
blog: http://thatbackpacker.com/
instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thatbackpac...
facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thatbackpacker
twitter: https://twitter.com/ThatBackpacker
SAMUEL:
blog: http://nomadicsamuel.com/
facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nomadicsamuel
twitter: https://twitter.com/NomadicSamuel
instragram: https://www.instagram.com/nomadicsamuel/
The following is a list of things to do in Israel with a focus on the top attractions in this travel guide:
1) Regardless of whether you can swim (or not swim) well you will most certainly float when visiting the Dead Sea. Covering yourself in gooey mud and joining others floating is one of the top attractions in Israel.
2) No trip to Israel would be complete without sampling the local cuisine and especially the street food. With this in mind we walked all the way from our hotel room in Tel Aviv to Jaffa - an ancient city renowned for its amazing hummus and other street food. Aside from just hummus we were able to try Shaksouka, cheese stuffed pastries, malabi and kanafeh.
3) Having the opportunity to take a tour of the West Bank (or Palestine) is an eye opening experience. Media coverage, from the perspective of the west, often depicts this area as being quite unruly and poor; however, a tour there really dispels a lot of myths. We had the opportunity to eat falafel, walking around the streets and get a real sense of what life is like in this region. Some highlights included visiting Sheppard's Field, the Jordan River and oldest city in the world - Jericho. To end our trip we drank beer at the West Bank Palestinian brewery.
4) Getting off the beaten track a little we visited Rosh Hanikra. Known as the window to the Mediterranean we were treated to breathtaking views and an amazing sunset.
5) Aside from just eating our way around Jaffa, we took the time to properly explore it on foot. One of the top highlights was visiting a traditional flea market,
6) Taking the cable car up to visit Masada was a welcome relief considering how hot it was on the day we visited. As we wandered about we visited an old water cistern and Byzantine church.
7) Caesarea! The ruins of the ancient city once given from AgusCaesar to Harrod the Great was an experience we'll never forget. Walking around in the Hippodrome allowed me to visualize what the old chariot races must have been like.
8) One of my favorite meals in Israel was prepared by a Druze family. This amazing feast, in the form of a buffet, featured kebabs, olives, chicken and stuffed cabbage just to name a few.
9) Wondering wear to rest your sleepy head while traveling in Israel? Look no further than the Fauzi Azar Inn in Nazareth. This converted ArabMansion.
10) One of the more frontier attractions was visiting Golan Heights and the Sea of Galilee. We toured around the BaniasReserve and Mount Bental.
11) Considering how tasty the food is in Israel it would be a shame to leave without knowing how to recreate these delectable delights back home in your own kitchen. Fortunately, for us, we were able to take a cooking class at Dan Gourmet in Tel Aviv. We learned how to make Lahmacun and charred eggplant amongst other dishes.
12) Have you ever wondered how olive oil is made? Visiting an olive press answered our all of our questions and made us appreciate the craft of making this high quality cooking oil. For the best vantage point of Nazareth we headed to Mount Precipice for panoramic 360 degree views. Finally, we visited Haifa to check out the famous Bahá'í gardens.
כאשר אתה חושב על הנסיעה לישראל לבקר באתרים דתיים בירושלים או מבססת את עצמך בתל אביב עשוי בתחילה מגיע אל המוח. עם זאת, כאשר בוחנים ישראל אותו הוא בעל חשיבות עליונה להפריש מספיק זמן כדי לקבל את השביל הכבושולחקור יותר של המדינה. למרבה המזל, עבורנו, שהיינו מסוגל לעשות את שתי נסיעות נפרדות לישראל נתקל בכמה שיותר אוכל, תרבות, היסטורי ואטרקציות מודרניות כפי שאנו יכולים להיות.
This is part of our Travel in Israel series showcasing Israeli culture, Israeli arts & Israeli foods.
This video features music -various artists and various songs - available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Commercial license.

Jerusalem traders suffer amid MidEast tension

(18 Oct2015) The normally crowded, busy streets of the Old City in Jerusalem appeared quieter on Sunday following days of increased tension and violence between Israelis and Palestinians across the region.
Israeli troops patrolled the streets, searching Palestinian youths and checking their identity cards meticulously after a wave of stabbings and shootings that have gripped the Palestinian occupied territories.
Shop keepers in the Old City complained bitterly of not earning enough, blaming their lack of custom on harassment by Israeli soldiers.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/445f8bf69f1b314c9ed07ff252a1f4da
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

What It's Like To Be Absolutely Obsessed With Bitcoin (HBO)

Over the past year, the price of a Bitcoin has skyrocketed from less than $800 to nearly $20,000 — a meteoric rise that financial insiders say is no different than the escalating cost of a tulip in seventeenth-century Amsterdam.
Is it a bubble? Who cares! As VICENews' Jay Kang told us, “It’s impossible right now to not get rich if you own any Bitcoin.”
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2:04

ISRAEL: PILGRIM'S MARCH REACHES JERUSALEM

English/Nat
60 pilgrims from all faiths, nationalities and walks of life marched throug...

ISRAEL: PILGRIM'S MARCH REACHES JERUSALEM

English/Nat
60 pilgrims from all faiths, nationalities and walks of life marched through the streets of Jerusalem today as part of a 9 month, 20 country pilgrimage for peace.
The colourful group, led by Buddhist monks from Japan began their journey in Auschwitz, Poland back in December 1994.
The journey will end in Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th1995, the anniversary of the ending of World War Two.
The group started its pilgrimage at the Nazi death in Auschwitz in December 1994. They've crossed through many European countries including the war torn Bosnia and Serbia and will finally arrive in Hiroshima, Japan for the August 6th anniversary of the ending of World War 11.
The pilgrims have now arrived in Israel and will continue their journey via the West Bank, Jordan, and Iraq before crossing into Asia, where they will visit Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia and Vietnam.
The group has members from all religions and will visit churches, mosques, and synagogues. Many are currently observing the month-long fast for the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.
SOUNDBITE:
This year is 50 years since World War Two and we wanted to deeply reflect our history with the human beings created in order to create peace through the next age and generation. That's why we are walking as an interfaith march of peace and pilgrimage.
SUPERCAPTION: Kioshi Sasamari , Japanese BuddhistMonk
Their pilgrimage covers 10,000 kms and members of the group range in age from 17 to 74.
SOUNDBITE:
We are walking through 20 countries over 9 months in the worst of weather in almost every country and I feel a very deep need to go to pray for peace and victims of these wars. To learn more about what has happened to these people and hopefully through our presence spark a little more spirituality and to recognize the sacredness of our lives.
SUPER CAPTION: Joe Roach, Pilgrim from Massachusetts, U-S-A
They hope their march of peace will encourage all nationalities and religions to work for a peaceful end to all conflicts.
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Dishes of all kinds break the fast in East Jerusalem

(12 Jun 2016) LEAD IN:
The bustling markets of East Jerusalem really come alive during the holy month of Ramadan.
After a day's fasting, there's plenty here to satisfy thousands of hungry Muslims.
STORY-LINE:
A worker lights the fuse and retreats to a safe distance.
This is the moment Muslims await.
The boom of the Ramadan canon. A single shot is fired marking sunset.
It is time for 'iftar' or the breaking of the fast after a long day of not eating or drinking.
Appetite soars in Ramadan. Food is on display in the busy markets of East Jerusalem. Katayef, being the most popular Ramadan dessert, is prepared right in front of passers-by.
For someone who is fasting, the sight and the smell are irresistible.
"During the month of Ramadan people desire sweets the most, katayef the most, then we have namorra. Demand for knafe drops of course" says Amjad Abu Sbeih, a sweet shop co-owner in the old city of Jerusalem.
Katayef is served especially in the month of Ramadan and is made in the shape of a crescent.
The round dough is stuffed with unsalted white cheese, folded in the shape of a crescent and then baked in an oven or fried in a pan. Sugar syrup is added afterwards.
'Barazea' is also on display, something of a delicacy at three times the prince of pita bread.
'Barazea' is a very thin crust bread, covered with sesame seeds. It is also served in Ramadan as a snack in the late hours of the evening, after iftar.
Hummus and falafel are popular all year round with Palestinians but it is in Ramadan when they are most in demand.
But for some traders, business could be better. The threat of falling numbers due to travel restrictions in the area is having an impact.
"We hope on Friday Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza are allowed into Jerusalem so that there will be more economic activity because in reality the situation is very bad. This volume of people that you see now began only in the last half hour. It has been slow for most of the day," says shop owner Muhamad Ekermawi.
Falafel, during the holy month, is made in different shapes and flavours. They even stuff it with french cream cheese, which many find delicious.
As night falls, colourful lights decorate the city.
Fasting time is almost 16 hours this time of the year. It starts around 4 a.m. and lasts till nearly 8 p.m.
But as the sun sets, it's time to eat.
For young Muhamad Edkeidek, tonight's iftar meal was a rich selection of food.
"I had a stuffed whole chicken and soup, salads and Katayef for dessert."
Some people take the month of Ramadan off and devote their time to worshiping; praying and reading the Quran.
While others simply work reduced hours.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d75aea0b77981949e1c1c011a942a861
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Guard posts to monitor Jerusalem boundries

(19 Oct 2015) Israeli security forces placed a guard post in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Jabel Mukaber in East Jerusalem on Monday, as part of the heightened security effort following a spate of attacks, mostly stabbings, by Palestinian assailants.
Israeli police have already erected a barrier between the Jewish neighbourhood of Armon Hanatziv from the adjacent Jabel Mukaber, from where a number of Palestinian attackers came.
Israel has deployed thousands of police, backed up by troops, to maintain order around the country over the past few weeks.
Those measures, however, have so far failed to stop the violence.
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Preparations for Eid in Gaza, East Jerusalem and Ramallah

SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION
Gaza City, Gaza Strip
1. Various of sweet stand at market
2. Close up of sweets
3. Man shopping for sweets
4. Woman at market
5. Close up of bag with sweets
6. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Abdul Nasser Nashwan, Gaza resident:
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult."
7. Close up of snacks
8. Mid of nuts stand
9. People working in market
Jerusalem
10. Wide of Al-Aqsa mosque
11. Mid of entrance to mosque
12. Close up of Muslim worshipper reading Quran inside mosque
13. Mid of street vendor in east Jerusalem alley
14. Shop owner standing in traditional pastry shop
15. Close up of pastries
16. Mid of sweets stand
Ramallah, West Bank
17. Mid of toy vendor
18. Children looking at dolls
19. Close up of girl choosing doll
20. Family walking in market
21. Women buying peaches
22. Man buying socks
23. Close up of baby
24. People choosing shirts
25. Girl walking with balloon
26. Mid of fruit stand
27. Women looking at shoes at market
28. Queue at shop selling nuts
29. Close up of girl inside shop
30. Wide of square in Ramallah
STORYLINE
Market traders across Jerusalem, the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip stocked up on sweets as people prepared for Eid al-Fitr, the Muslim holiday marking the end of Ramadan.
The celebrations last for three days and are a time for family gatherings and exchanging gifts.
The holiday atmosphere however, was muted in Gaza Strip, after the overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt led the new regime to close the Gaza-Egypt border, driving up prices.
"Only some people are shopping but the majority are only looking at the stands and are not buying because there isn't enough money as before, people's situation is hard, especially this year our situation is very difficult" said Gaza resident Abdul Nasser Nashwan.
Thousands of workers in already blighted Gaza have been laid off because Egypt has closed the border, while some of the tens of thousands of Palestinians studying and working in Egypt are keeping a low profile for fear being targeted in an anti-Hamas backlash.
Egypt's new rulers have portrayed Hamas and Mohammed Morsi as co-conspirators in a plot to destabilise Egypt and harm the country's interests.
Elsewhere in Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah, there was a more festive atmosphere.
Outdoor markets were filled with Palestinian shoppers stocking up on sweets, presents and new clothes ahead of the festival.
The Eid holiday begins on the first day of the month of Shawal, the tenth month of the lunar Islamic calendar.
There are however, regional differences in the exact timing of Eid due to different interpretations of the lunar calendar.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d844afbae3f56efd41971d21dd941806
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